Friends,
From June 27 – July 2 many of our fellow Presbyterians gathered in Milwaukee for the 227th General Assembly (GA) of the Presbyterian Church (USA). I will offer some (only some) of the things that took place there, with links if you want to explore anything further.
1. Structure: Over the last four years, a “Unification Commission” has been working to unify two branches of the church that were previously separated: The Office of the General Assembly and the Presbyterian Mission Agency. The new, unified entity will be called “Presbyterian Life & Witness” (PLW). PLW will be led by the Rev. Jihyun Oh, Executive Director and Stated Clerk of the General Assembly, to support synods and presbyteries, leader development, reparative justice, life of the communion, and strategic partnerships. For more information, visit this portal.
2. Mission: Going into the GA meeting, there were a lot of deep feelings about actions that led to the elimination of the PCUSA World Mission program and the termination of all appointed Mission Co-Worker positions back in March of 2025. Both the decision itself and the execution of the decision were under strong criticism by former mission co-workers. In the end, the GA passed a motion 396-98 to form a 7-person Commission to review the decision-making process dating from 2018 that led to the actions of March 2025. The group will offer an interim report in 2028 and a final report in 2030 GA meeting. (You can read the full motion here.) The purpose of the commission is “to be restorative, not punitive” but it may contain recommendations to appropriate bodies about terminating employees. The PCUSA now has an office of Global Ecumenical Partnerships, which you can explore here.
3. Israel/Palestine: After hearing the impassioned testimony of Palestinian-America, Fahed Abu-Akel, Moderator of the GA in 2002, the GA voted 454-15 declaring that the government of Israel has violated the international law prohibiting genocide in its war in Gaza. If you do not have a subscription to The Presbyterian Outlook, you can read 3 articles for free, and I recommend this one to see what this action entails.
4. Christian Nationalism: By a vote of 458-18, commissioners approved a motion asking the denomination’s 164 presbyteries to ratify new Book of Order language affirming the church’s commitment to justice, peace, mercy, and human dignity while rejecting “any ideology that seeks to establish Christianity as a privileged or dominant force through the power of the state, or that conflates religious identity with national, racial, or ethnic supremacy.” The GA also directed the denominational leadership to take an active role in making sure the ideology is truly understood by issuing “a joint statement calling attention to the dangers and distortions of Christian Nationalism as an urgent theological and social concern of our time.” The San Jose Presbytery authored the resolution describing Christian Nationalism as “a dangerous and increasingly pervasive ideology that seeks to merge national identity with Christian identity, distorting both faith and politics” that “contradicts the foundational commitments and public witness of our church: love, equality, inclusion, peace, religious freedom and the imago dei [image of God] of all beings.”
5. LGBTQIA: There were several actions taken by the GA and appropriate groups regarding LGBTQIA matters. The GA voted to support gender-affirming healthcare and to let congregations signal their openness to calling an LGBTQIA+ pastor on their Ministry Discernment Profile when searching for a pastor.
Of course there were many more motions, referrals, heated debates, affirmative conversations, and worship moments throughout the GA meeting that space will not allow me to cover (and the breadth of which does not allow me to comprehend.) Some of the links I have provided can lead you to more information and I’m happy to explore other things with you if you want. Overall, the work of GA is passionate and difficult, but I found this GA to be particularly focused on speaking prophetically, both outwardly and inwardly, as God moved them. For that I am thankful.
Mark of St. Mark